Additional Info

Nearby Theaters

This movie theater was at 7th Street and Snyder Avenue in South Philadelphia. It was already closed by the time I was born, but the wall sign stating GRAND THEATER is still there! It is now a dollar store.

The GRAND is now a tool store…they removed the siding, etc and the original black and white painted wall shows now! It reads, “GRAND THEATER…Matinee—Talkies”. I took tons of pics of the wall, now I just have to get time to upload them!

The Synder Avenue Baptist Church was converted into a moviehouse in 1911. The listing above that Hoffman-Henon were the architects is mistaken. Silent films were joined by vaudeville. . Another renovation, by architect W.H. Lee, took place in the 1930’s. The Grand had 850 seats. A retail store took over by the 1960’s.

The Synder Avenue Baptist Church was converted into a moviehouse in 1911. The listing above that Hoffman-Henon were the architects is mistaken. Silent films were joined by vaudeville. . Another renovation, by architect W.H. Lee, took place in the 1930’s. The Grand had 850 seats. A retail store took over by the 1960’s.

Anthony DiFlorio III (who supplied the above photos!) received the below email, and has told me I can post it here:

What a memory! But you must know the Grand is/was at Seventh and Snyder Avenue not Sixth Street. It once was a Baptist Church but as the neighborhood changed before WWI it became a hall and eventually a movie house. It was three-four blocks from where I lived, near Ninth and Wolf Streets. I seldom went to the Grand for one good reason. The fare was nineteen cents because it was air-conditioned! It was tough enough for me to get eleven cents for the Colonial movie house, nineteen cents was beyond my reach. But just to experience the air-conditioning, I very slowly accumulated nineteen pennies and entered the frigid world and saw Spencer Tracy and Bartholmew -what ever the rest of his name- was in some fishing drama. How I accumulated nineteen pennies is another story. Thanks for the memory.
Umberto LaPaglia

The movie Mr. LaPaglia saw for 19 cents in 1937 at the newly air-conditioned Grand was Captains Courageous, starring Spencer Tracy and Freddie Bartholomew. I still want to know how he got the 19 cents together.

i recently took my father for a ride around the neighborhood (he lived there as a kid) and remembers going to the grand theater alot. he was in there when news broke about pearl habor. he can’t remember what was playing. if anyone has any information could you let me know?

A discrepancy seems to exist regarding the number of seats that the Grand Theater had. The overview states the Grand had 949 seats. Howard believes there were 850 seats. Could this reduction have occurred during Wm. H. Lee’s 1930’s renovation or during another period?